100 Years of Yuri Events Schedule Update

June 16th, 2019

I’ve updated my 100th Anniversary of the Yuri Genre speaking schedule. I’ll be at the following events:

Yurithon, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. August 16-18, 2019, Palais des congrès de Montréal.

Crunchyroll Expo, San Jose, CA, USA. August 30 – September 1, 2019. San Jose Convention Center

100 Years of Yuri Tour, Tokyo Japan – September 8-16, 2019. Sign-up deadline is July 9th. We hope you can join us for this historical event!

Michigan State University, Michigan. October 14-16, 2019.

AnimeNYC, New York City. November 15-17, 2019. Javits Convention Center

If you wish to have me talk at your event, school or organization, please contact me!



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – June 15, 2019

June 15th, 2019

Special News

For Pride Month, Seven Seas is teaming up with Yuricon & ALC Publishing to give away prize packs of LGBTQ books to libraries! Three library systems PLUS three individual libraries will win free books. Library staff need to fill out this form by June 30 to enter! Please share this news with your local library. Let’s get some great LGBTQ manga on your library’s shelves!

There are 3 weeks to sign up for the 100th Anniversary Yuri Tour of Japan. We need 4 more people to join this tour to make it happen. Okazu Patrons will get a discount off the deposit and a special 100th anniversary design T-shirt! I’ve made you a (really) short video to try and convince you to sign up!

 

Yuri Anime

ANN reports on the upcoming Yuri Theatrical OVA Fragtime teaser video, main visuals and staff and that it will have a November debut.

 

LGBTQ Cartoon

The team behind Steven Universe posted a tweet that sent my heart all a-flutter, with the announcement of the folks working on music for the Steven Universe Movie. Chance the Rapper is co-producing. How awesome is that? It also leaves me with questions. Is Bismuth getting a song? Will we see Opal again? When will I get a Peridot x Lapis fusion?! ^_^

My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic debuted a same-sex couple this month! Aunty Holiday and Auntie Lofty are Scootaloo’s guardians. Taimur Dar writes about this, Arthur, Doc McStuffins and LGBTQ representation in kids cartoons on The Comics Beat.

 

Yuri Manga

Nikurashii hodo Aishiteru  (憎らしいほど愛してる) is a story about an office affair between a married woman and a woman who loves her maybe too possessively?

Hayakawa publishing (publisher of the popular Yuri issue of SF magazine) is about to release a Yuri science fiction short story anthology, Asterism ni Hanataba o Yuri (アステリズムに花束を 百合).

 

Yuri Doujinshi

DMP’s Lilyka imprint has a bunch of new Yuri doujinshi including SHWD an action Yuri series full of beefy women that I picked up last winter at Comiket!

 

Yuri VN

Mangagamers has released Yuri VN Amrilato: The Expression. Enjoy Yuri romance and learn Esperanto at the same time!

 

LGBTQ Comics

Comixology has added LGBTQ superhero comic series The Pride Season Two.

Over on School Library Journal, Brigid Alverson looks at LGBTQIA+ Graphic Novels for Young Readers.

 

Yuri Event Reports

I just wanted to take a quick look back and thank all of our intrepid YNN Correspondents reporting from spring 2019’s Yuriten events in Osaka, Sendai and Fukuoka! Thanks Zoey, Meru and Jenn!

Here’s a lovely account from Takashima Hiromi-sensei’s panel at the Japan Foundation in Toronto in conjunction with TCAF.  I can’t see it when I’m in it, so it was really nice to see what the impression from the audience was. ^_^

I’ll be posting a new appearance schedule this week on Yuricon, so look out for that!

 

Other News

I’ll now put myself out of business when I point you to Yuri Times, a Twitter feed that covers Yuri news in English. ^_^

Comic Historian Carol Tilley presents this brilliant history piece – Jane Krom Grammer: A Golden-Age Comic Book Artist Finally Receives Credit for Her Work.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC’s Tale of Genji : A Japanese Classic Illuminated was very interesting! In effect, it was Muromachi and Edo period fanart and fanfic of Genji. ^_^

Gentleman Jack’s Finale Was One of the Finest Hours in Lesbian Cinematic History article by Heather Hogan on Autostraddle neatly summarizes everything I thought and felt about the end of the first season of this terrific show.

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast (I know I owe you all one!) Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to!

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!



LGBTQ Comic: Kiss Number 8 (English)

June 14th, 2019

Kiss Number 8 by Colleen AF Venable and Ellen T. Crenshaw is the last of the books I brought home from TCAF, in this case thanks to Johanna Draper Carlson of Comics Worth Reading. Johanna and I agree on almost nothing, but I love conversing with her is terrific and I  almost always learn something I did not know when I do. ^_^

I know I talk about TCAF a lot, but one of the things about that I particularly like about it is the proximity to so many reviewers who recommend excellent books to me that I might not otherwise know about. And this year, as the Ladies in a Hotel Room occupied the corner table at the lobby bar, we had a great number of amazingly talented, passionate and interesting people join us. So I actually met Colleen and Ellen before having had a chance to read this book.

Kiss Number 8 follows Mads, a high school girl from a family in a community that is strongly, even strictly, Christian. Church and age-appropriate dances and the like fill her life. Her friend’s brother is into her though she’s not into him, although she tries to be, for a while. And in the meantime, she’s dealing with a pile of normalish growing up things, and a family secret that she’s just kinda pissed about. She’ not pissed that they have a family secret, or, when she learns what it is, but she is seriously pissed at her Dad, who is her best friend, being a dick about it.

Speaking of best friends, Mads has some friend issues of her own. Her one best friend is in love with her, which was kinda obvious to me, but not to Mads and Mads is in love with a different friend, which is obvious to everyone, except Mads.  Mads is trying to be the good (straight) girl her community and family want her to be. So when she has kiss number 8, drama ensues, but not for the reason you might expect.The story isn’t a “coming out” narrative, although that does happen. When Mads and we finally learn her family secret, it’s not at all what we -or she – think it is.

Everything about Mads’ life as it is presented, is alien to me.  But the mass amounts of drama around friendship and dating…that was all as I remember it. So it was both entirely realistic and also oddly foreign, the way going over to dinner at a friend’s house was when you were 12 and finding that all the things you had on the table and thought were normal are nowhere to be seen on your friend’s table and if you ask for Worcestershire sauce they just stared uncomrehendingly…it was like that.

Although the art isn’t photorealistic, it conveys a very realistic feel to the story, with a single-camera perspective. It’s an easy read, even though it can be emotionally heavy.  The story, the characters, the art all combine to tell a poignant tale of learning about life, about one’s self and the people around one.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 8
Characters – 6 I only really liked Laura
Service – Not really
LGBTQ – 9

Overall – 8

Like Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me, this is a solid YA book that would make a great pride gift for your family member who needs help understanding themselves or others, or the local library. ^_^

 



Yuri Manga: BariKyari to Shinsou (バリキャリと新卒)

June 13th, 2019

BariKyari to Shinsou (バリキャリと新卒) has an interesting history. YNN reader CW gives us this brief overview:

“The opening originates in a brief comic posted to twitter which went viral. A few months later the mangaka asked twitter followers which of 4 ideas for couples they were interested in, with the clear favorite being Morino and Niiro. The web manga serialization began on Comic Walker not long afterwards. It looks like one of the cases where an editor invited a creator who was getting noticed on social media to do a series. The story progresses organically from the premise, but I think it’s ultimately a bit of a vestigial limb.”

And here we are, reading the collected volume of this web comic. BariKyari to Shinsou (バリキャリと新卒) by esuesu, starts with Niiro, a stressed out manager, being told by Morino, the lesbian sex worker Niiro’s been seeing, that Morino’s getting out of the sex work business and getting an office job. Because we are reading this comic, we’re not all that surprised to see Niiro’s newest kouhai at work being introduced…yeah, it’s Morino.

The two women navigate the boundaries of their workplace relationship, uncomfortably at first. And Niiro seems listless, uninterested or unwilling to get involved much. It’s fairly apparent to us, however, that she’s a ball of conflicting emotions. The tension finally snaps when Morino encounters some overt sexism from a manager and, finally, Niiro is able to verbalize her feelings for Morino. Niiro assists Morino to prove that she was in the right, and openly expresses herself to their manager.

And, Niiro tells Morino that she likes her.

They get together as a couple, as peers, and live what we are going to imagine is happily ever after.

There are a number of things to like about this story. Sex work itself is neither trivialized nor smeared and, with one or two exceptions, the situations in the office feel like things people deal with. The male manager taking the male employee’s side is a wholly real-world actual kind of rage, not outrage at an annoying plot point. I appreciated this level of realism later on in the story, especially because an early “gag” moment is merely eye-rollingly unfunny.

The final impression was that the story kind of took off from the original concept and told itself. ^_^ I was pleasantly surprised throughout. 

Ratings:

Art – 8 Very simple, but good expressions and body language
Story – 8 It had a few bumps
Character – 9
Service – 2 Very little visual service, honestly. Some verbal service.
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

There was a time when I would have suggested that there was no way we’d see this in print, but things are a little different now. On the one hand Yen Press is Kadokawa’s partner in the west, (as opposed to Seven Seas – I am more confident that they’d be comfortable publishing this) however, if this sounds like something you’d like to see in print, definitely let Yen know.

I want to mention a little crisis I had as I began writing today’s review. I asked myself if this was Yuri or not, since these adult women are obviously lesbian (and one of Niiro’s exes appears and identifies herself as an ex), but as usual do not use the word itself. Ultimately, I decided that since the obi describes this as 社会人百合 story, (what I’m translating as “adult life,” since we don’t have an analogous term to shakaijin…”productive member of society,” maybe?) so “Yuri” manga it is. This manga is a great example of Is Yuri Queer? These women love and have sex with other women overtly enough that the word “lesbian”  is perhaps irrelevant.

It would make a fantastic conversation, in fact. What do you think? In your opinion is this comic LGBTQ or Yuri or both?



Yuri Manga: Douseiseikatsu 2 Watashi dake ga Tokubetsunara ii no ni (同棲生活2 わたしだけが特別ならいいのに)

June 12th, 2019

In 2018, we had a chance to look at Dousei Seikatsu ~ Watashi o Sukittekoto Desho (同棲生活 ~ わたしを好きってことでしょ, a full color slice-of life Pixiv manga by Satsumaage.

Today we have a sequel, Dousei Seikatsu 2 Watashi dake ga Tokubetsunara ii no ni (同棲生活2 わたしだけが特別ならいいのに). Like the original volume, this manga does not have a plot. It is instead filled with the minutiae that make up a life.

Yuuko and Miyuki share good days and bad days, food and drink, sleeping on the sofa and make fun of each other, as couples do.

As an accurate and affectionate look at two women living together as a couple, this is utterly delightful. Yuuchan is much more touchy-feely, and Miyuki is a but more needy emotionally, but any conflicts between them are small. Like “You drank my beer,” small. We don’t have to worry about them, They are a fine and we’re just watching them live.

Ratings:

Art – 8 Perspective is sometimes wonky, but otherwise solid
Story – 8 Life
Characters – 9 I’d have them over for lunch
Service  – 2 Surprisingly little
LGBTQ – 9 No discussion of them as lesbian, but it’s really aside the point here. They are a couple.

Overall – 9

It makes a good “just a couple of pages” at night before bed kind of story.